Robin Williams' Widow: 'I Don't Blame Him One Bit'

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Robin Williams (r.) and Susan Schneider arrive to the Los Angeles premiere of "Old Dogs" held at the El Capitan Theatre on November 9, 2009 in Hollywood, California.

Robin Williams' widow says his medical afflictions would have claimed his life within three years — "hard years" — and that she doesn't blame him for his suicide.

Susan Williams said the actor-comedian had not only been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, a progressive movement disorder, a few months before his death, but also that a coroner's report found signs of Lewy body dementia, a difficult-to-diagnose condition that leads to a decline in thinking and reasoning abilities.

That may have contributed to the anxiety and depression for which he was treated in his last months, and that likely played a role in his August 2014 suicide by hanging.

Though there were many reasons why he ended his life, she said, it may have all come down to one: "I think he was just saying, 'No.' And I don't blame him one bit."

She called him "the bravest man I've ever known."

Williams' symptoms began in November 2013, she said in an interview that aired Tuesday on ABC's "Good Morning America." They included stomach pain, constipation, urinary trouble and sleeplessness.

By the following May, he was suffering from stiffness, slumping, a shuffling gait and "losing his ability in his voice," she said.

Robin Williams: Life and Times

"It's one minute, totally lucid," she recalled. "And then, five minutes later, he would say something that wasn't — it didn't match."

In what would be the final week of his life, doctors were planning to check him into a facility for neurocognitive testing. But in those last weeks, he was "disintegrating before my eyes," she said. "We were living a nightmare."

Williams, who had battled substance addiction in the past, was clean and sober when he died, she said, having recently marked eight years of sobriety.